3
1
Sometimes when I am using Git and cannot do a sudo
command, it reports
fork: Resource temporarily unavailable
What does this mean, and what should I do about it?
3
1
Sometimes when I am using Git and cannot do a sudo
command, it reports
fork: Resource temporarily unavailable
What does this mean, and what should I do about it?
1
This fork error usually means the parent program was unable to execute one-or-more child processes because a resource limit was reached, either the maximum allowed number of processes (the EAGAIN
error) or maximum allowed amount of memory (ENOMEM
error). The man page of Fork(2) says:
Fork() will fail and no child process will be created if:
[EAGAIN] The system-imposed limit on the total number of processes under execution would
be exceeded. This limit is configuration-dependent.
[EAGAIN] The system-imposed limit MAXUPRC (<sys/param.h>) on the total number of pro-
cesses under execution by a single user would be exceeded.
[ENOMEM] There is insufficient swap space for the new process.
There are several ways that limits are imposed on OS X:
ulimit
command. You can view current limit by running ulimit -a
and set a new limit, e.g., ulimit -u 1000
to set the max proc limit to 1000. This limit remains until the current termian session ends./Library/LaunchDaemons/limit.maxfiles.plist
(only OS X 10.9+). For more detail see this answer.